Chapter 120: Reconnection
Friday morning arrived with unexpected rain, the kind of steady drizzle that made students huddle under awnings and complain about outdoor training sessions being relocated inside.
William sat in the covered dining area, watching water stream down the windows while eating breakfast. Kai had left early for personal training, leaving William to his own devices for the morning.
"Is this seat taken?"
He looked up to find Mira standing with her tray, her dark hair was slightly damp from the rain.
He thought her shadow manipulation techniques meant she could have avoided getting wet entirely, but apparently she hadn’t bothered.
"It’s open."
Mira sat gracefully, arranging her food with precise movements. "I heard you had an extended family visit. Must have been important to miss almost a week of classes right before the competition."
"My mother had things she wanted to teach me."
"Your mother personally instructing you." Mira’s dark eyes were thoughtful. "That’s significant. Most noble parents send their children to the academy and consider their training complete."
"My mother isn’t like most parents."
"Clearly." Mira took a delicate bite of her breakfast. "My own mother was asking about you, actually. She attended your family’s gathering and was quite impressed with your sparring demonstration against that some other guy you fought."
William remembered Lady Ashford’s pointed questions about his relationship with Mira. "Your mother seems to have strong opinions about many things."
"She does. Particularly about suitable marriage arrangements and family alliances." Mira’s tone was dry. "I assume she cornered you at some point during the gathering to assess your worthiness."
"Something like that."
"I apologize. She means well but her approach to social engineering is exhaustingly direct." Mira paused. "For what it’s worth, I told her I value you as a teammate and friend, not a potential marriage arrangement. That should reduce the pressure somewhat."
"I appreciate that."
They ate in comfortable silence for a few minutes, watching rain continue to fall outside.
"The team’s been practicing without you and Kai," Mira said eventually. "We’ve been having coordination drills mostly, since we’re down our two strongest members. Everyone’s anxious about the competition."
"Understandable. It’s a big event."
"It’s more than that now. After what happened at the Thornvale expedition..." Mira lowered her voice. "The academy’s on edge. Security has been increased, professors are monitoring student movements more carefully, and there are rumors about external threats targeting the academy."
William kept his expression neutral. "What kind of external threats?"
"No one’s saying officially. But Derek’s betrayal has everyone paranoid. If a third-year student could hire assassins to attack an academy expedition, what else might be compromised?" Mira looked at him directly. "You and Kai stay in the same room. Is it true what people are saying? About him defeating four strong assassins by himself?"
"I wasn’t there. But Kai is significantly more capable than most people realize."
"That’s not a denial." Mira smiled slightly. "Interesting. Your quiet roommate who avoids attention turns out to be a hidden combat master. And you return from a family visit with new weapons and obviously improved abilities. The Inter-Academy team is becoming quite formidable."
"That’s the point of a team. Complementary strengths."
"True. Though it would help if we actually trained together as a full team." Mira finished her breakfast. "I’m organizing a coordination session this afternoon. It’s an advanced training ground which will be at three, after classes end. Can you make it?"
"Yes."
"Excellent. I’ll inform the others." She stood, gathering her tray. "Oh, and William? Whatever you and Kai are dealing with, and I know you’re both dealing with something, the team has your backs. Remember that."
She left before he could respond.
William finished his breakfast alone, processing Mira’s words. The team knowing something was wrong without knowing specifics was both reassuring and concerning.
It was reassuring because it meant they would be vigilant. Concerning because it meant their awareness could make them targets.
His morning classes were the usual mixture of cultivation theory and essence manipulation practice.
William found himself performing better than before his family visit, his mother’s intensive training translating into improved classroom technique.
Professor Ashcroft noticed during essence control exercises.
"Mr. Cross, your precision has improved significantly. Have you been practicing the meditation techniques I recommended?"
"Yes, professor. And my mother provided additional instruction during my visit."
"It shows. Your essence flow is noticeably more refined than even two weeks ago." Ashcroft looked pleased. "Continue this trajectory and you’ll be approaching advanced practitioner levels by graduation."
After class, William encountered Lyanna in the hallway. She brightened immediately upon seeing him.
"William! Perfect timing. I wanted to talk to you about this weekend."
"The town visit you mentioned?"
"Exactly. I was thinking Saturday afternoon—you, me, Liam, Marcus, maybe a few others. Just relaxing before competition preparations become completely consuming." Lyanna fell into step beside him as they walked. "There’s a new tea shop that opened near the market square. S
I heard it’s supposed to have excellent pastries."
"I’ll need to check my training schedule."
"You always need to check your training schedule." Lyanna’s tone was teasing. "At some point you should just accept that rest is part of training and come have fun with your friends."
"That’s not how cultivation advancement works."
"Maybe not, but it’s how not becoming a miserable hermit works." She smiled at him. "Come on, William. A few hours in town, we’ll eat real food and have an actual conversation, no essence techniques or combat drills. It’ll be good for you."
William found himself considering it. When had he last done something purely for enjoyment rather than strategic value?
The outing with his sister didn’t count—that had been about her recovery. Before that... he couldn’t actually remember.
"Saturday afternoon," he agreed. "A few hours."
Lyanna’s smile widened. "Excellent! I’ll organize everything. Wear casual clothes, not your usual training attire."
She hurried off to her next class, leaving William wondering what he had just committed to.
Lunch arrived and William found himself at an unexpectedly crowded table. Liam and Marcus were there as usual, but they’d been joined by Sara from the Inter-Academy team, Elena who was friends with Marcus, and Thomas—one of the scouts from Kai’s ill-fated expedition.
"—and then Derek just started laughing," Thomas was saying, his hands gesturing animatedly. "Like watching people almost die was entertaining. It was disturbing."
"Derek always had issues," Sara said. "But hiring assassins to attack his own team? That’s beyond just being aggressive or competitive. That’s genuinely unstable."
William sat down quietly, not interrupting the conversation.
"The crazy part is how Kai handled it," Thomas continued, noticing William but continuing his story. "He was completely depleted and he still talked five Hollow Court assassins into leaving. I’ve never seen anything like it."
"Hollow Court?" Marcus looked confused. "What’s that?"
"They’re a professional assassination organization. They don’t take contracts from random people, only established clients with serious resources." Thomas lowered his voice. "If they were involved in attacking an academy expedition, that means someone powerful wanted us dead."
The table went quiet at that observation.
Elena spoke up hesitantly. "But why? We’re just students. What threat could an academy expedition pose to anyone?"
"That’s what everyone’s asking," Sara said. "The academy administration has been investigating but they’re not sharing details. Meanwhile we’re all just supposed to go to classes and pretend nothing happened."
William listened carefully, noting details. The Hollow Court’s appearance at the expedition was public knowledge among those who’d been there, but the connection to his own assassination attempts remained unknown.
"How’s Henrik?" he asked Thomas.
"He’s recovering. He has a broken arm and some internal injuries and concussion. He’ll be fine eventually but he’s out of active duty for at least a month." Thomas looked grim. "He feels responsible for what happened. Like he should have seen Derek’s betrayal coming."
"No one saw it coming," Sara said firmly. "Derek played his role perfectly. Acting unstable and aggressive made everyone think he was just a hothead, not someone planning murder."
The conversation shifted to safer topics—upcoming classes, competition speculation, general academy gossip. William participated minimally, mostly just listening while eating.
After lunch, he had one more class before the team coordination session Mira had organized. The afternoon lecture on essence theory integration passed slowly, William’s mind already focused on seeing how the full team had developed during his absence.
When classes finally ended, he headed to advanced training ground three. The space was larger than standard training areas, designed for team exercises and group combat simulations.
Most of the Inter-Academy team was already there. Seraphina stood near the center, talking with Liam about something technical. Mira was reviewing notes at the edge of the space. Sara practiced forms in one corner while another team member—Jackson, a defensive specialist—stretched nearby.
"William!" Liam waved him over. "Good, we’re almost all here. Just waiting on Chen and Aria."
"And Kai?" William asked.
"He said he couldn’t make it. Something about personal training obligations." Liam shrugged. "Which is fine, we can coordinate with him separately. Though it would be nice if your mysterious roommate actually participated in team activities occasionally."
Seraphina approached, her assessment of William immediate and thorough. "You’ve been practicing what we worked on yesterday. Good. Your stance is more stable."
"Muscle memory settling in."
"More than that. You’re integrating the techniques into your natural movement patterns." She looked at the assembled team. "Alright, since everyone who’s coming is here, let’s start with coordination drills. The competition format includes team events where synchronization matters more than individual power."
What followed was two hours of intensive team exercises. They practiced formation movements, coordinated essence techniques, communication signals during combat, and tactical adjustments for different scenario simulations.
William found himself working well with the team, his improved abilities from his mother’s training translating into better synchronization. Seraphina noticed, offering corrections and adjustments that refined their coordination further.
"You and Liam need to work on attack timing," she said after one drill. "You’re both naturally aggressive fighters, which means you’re both trying to create openings instead of one creating and one exploiting. Decide who leads and who follows for each scenario."
Liam and William ran the drill again with adjusted roles. It worked better when William created openings and Liam capitalized on them with his superior raw power.
"That’s better," Seraphina confirmed. "Your precision creates clear opportunities for Liam’s strength to be most effective."
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